Mandar Kulkarni
Bombay Natural History Society
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Featured researches published by Mandar Kulkarni.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Vibhu Prakash; Mohan Chandra Bishwakarma; Anand Chaudhary; Richard J. Cuthbert; Ruchi Dave; Mandar Kulkarni; Sashi Kumar; Khadananda Paudel; Sachin P. Ranade; Rohan Shringarpure; Rhys E. Green
Populations of oriental white-backed vulture (Gyps bengalensis), long-billed vulture (Gyps indicus) and slender-billed vulture (Gyps tenuirostris) crashed during the mid-1990s throughout the Indian subcontinent. Surveys in India, initially conducted in 1991–1993 and repeated in 2000, 2002, 2003 and 2007, revealed that the population of Gyps bengalensis had fallen by 2007 to 0.1% of its numbers in the early 1990s, with the population of Gyps indicus and G. tenuirostris combined having fallen to 3.2% of its earlier level. A survey of G. bengalensis in western Nepal indicated that the size of the population in 2009 was 25% of that in 2002. In this paper, repeat surveys conducted in 2011 were analysed to estimate recent population trends. Populations of all three species of vulture remained at a low level, but the decline had slowed and may even have reversed for G. bengalensis, both in India and Nepal. However, estimates of the most recent population trends are imprecise, so it is possible that declines may be continuing, though at a significantly slower rate. The degree to which the decline of G. bengalensis in India has slowed is consistent with the expected effects on population trend of a measured change in the level of contamination of ungulate carcasses with the drug diclofenac, which is toxic to vultures, following a ban on its veterinary use in 2006. The most recent available information indicates that the elimination of diclofenac from the vultures’ food supply is incomplete, so further efforts are required to fully implement the ban.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2014
Richard J. Cuthbert; Mark A. Taggart; Vibhu Prakash; Soumya Sunder Chakraborty; Parag Deori; Toby H. Galligan; Mandar Kulkarni; Sachin P. Ranade; Mohini Saini; Anil Kumar Sharma; Rohan Shringarpure; Rhys E. Green
Veterinary use of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug diclofenac on domesticated ungulates caused populations of resident Gyps vultures in the Indian sub-continent to collapse. The birds died when they fed on carrion from treated animals. Veterinary diclofenac was banned in 2006 and meloxicam was advocated as a ‘vulture-safe’ alternative. We examine the effectiveness of the 2006 ban, whether meloxicam has replaced diclofenac, and the impact of these changes on vultures. Drug residue data from liver samples collected from ungulate carcasses in India since 2004 demonstrate that the prevalence of diclofenac in carcasses in 2009 was half of that before the ban and meloxicam prevalence increased by 44%. The expected vulture death rate from diclofenac per meal in 2009 was one-third of that before the ban. Surveys at veterinary clinics show that diclofenac use in India began in 1994, coinciding with the onset of rapid Gyps declines ascertained from measured rates of declines. Our study shows that one pharmaceutical product has had a devastating impact on Asias vultures. Large-scale research and survey were needed to detect, diagnose and quantify the problem and measure the response to remedial actions. Given these difficulties, other effects of pharmaceuticals in the environment may remain undetected.
Bird Conservation International | 2014
Toby H. Galligan; Tatsuya Amano; Vibhu Prakash; Mandar Kulkarni; Rohan Shringarpure; Nikita Prakash; Sachin P. Ranade; Rhys E. Green; Richard J. Cuthbert
Populations of three vulture species of the genus Gyps, the Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus and Red-headed Vulture Sarcogyps calvus have declined markedly on the Indian subcontinent since the mid-1990s and all are now Critically Endangered or Endangered. Gyps vultures have been killed by the widely used non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug diclofenac, ingested when they feed on carcasses of domesticated ungulates treated with the drug shortly before death. However, it is not known whether Egyptian Vulture and Red-headed Vulture are also sensitive to diclofenac. Veterinary use of diclofenac was banned in India in 2006. Since then, the prevalence and concentration of diclofenac in domesticated ungulates carcasses has decreased and population declines of Gyps vultures have slowed or reversed. Here, we examine counts of Egyptian and Red-headed Vultures obtained on road transects in and near protected areas between 1992 and 2011. We found indications that the declines in both species appear to have slowed and possibly increased after the ban was introduced, though the small numbers of birds counted make this conclusion less robust than that for the Gyps species. These results suggest that both species may have been adversely impacted by diclofenac and that government bans on this drug, which are beginning to take effect, may benefit a wider range of vulture species in the Indian subcontinent than was previously thought.
SpringerPlus | 2012
Prabhakar B Ghorpade; Praveen K. Gupta; Vibhu Prakash; Richard J. Cuthbert; Mandar Kulkarni; Nikita Prakash; Asit Das; Anil Kumar Sharma; Mohini Saini
During the last two decades populations of three resident species of Gyps vulture have declined dramatically and are now threatened with extinction in South Asia. Sex identification of vultures is of key importance for the purpose of conservation breeding as it is desirable to have an equal sex ratio in these monogamous species which are housed together in large colony aviaries. Because vultures are monomorphic, with no differences in external morphology or plumage colour between the sexes, other methods are required for sex identification. Molecular methods for sex identification in birds rely on allelic length or nucleotide sequence discrimination of the chromohelicase-DNA binding (CHD) gene located on male and female chromosomes ZZ and ZW, respectively. We characterized the partial sequences of CHD alleles from Gyps indicus, Gyps bengalensis, Gyps himalayensis and Aegypius monachus and analysed the applicability of five molecular methods of sex identification of 46 individual vultures including 26 known-sex G. bengalensis and G. indicus. The results revealed that W-specific PCR in combination with ZW-common PCR is a quick, accurate and simple method, and is ideal for sex identification of vultures. The method is also suitable to augment ecological studies for identifying sex of these endangered birds during necropsy examinations especially when gonads are not apparent, possibly due to regression during non-breeding seasons.
Oryx | 2016
Richard J. Cuthbert; Mark A. Taggart; Mohini Saini; Anil Kumar Sharma; Asit Das; Mandar Kulkarni; Parag Deori; Sachin P. Ranade; Rohan Shringarpure; Toby H. Galligan; Rhys E. Green
Archive | 2015
Richard J. Cuthbert; Toby H. Galligan; Mark A. Taggart; Mohini Saini; Mandar Kulkarni; P Arag Deori; S Achin Ranade; Rohan Shringarpure; Rhys E. Green
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society | 2015
Rohan Shringarpure; Mandar Kulkarni; Chhaya Sawant; Ashok Bhagwat; Vibhu Prakash
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society | 2015
Mandar Kulkarni; Rohan Shringarpure; Purvi Bhatt; Nikita Prakash; Vibhu Prakash
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society | 2014
Mandar Kulkarni; Rohan Shringarpure; Chandra Mohan; Mohini Saini; Tapan Kumar Palai; Praveen K. Gupta; Purvi Bhatt; Nikita Prakash; Ashok Bhagwat; Vibhu Prakash
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society | 2014
Rohan Shringarpure; Mandar Kulkarni; Chhaya Sawant; Ashok Bhagwat; Toby H. Galligan; Vibhu Prakash